Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 256, Decatur, Adams County, 31 October 1955 — Page 7
MONDAY, GGTQWHI »L jgtt
.— - . ... . - „ . —
Notre Dame And Michigan Wins Top Features CHICAGO (INS) — Unbeaten and untied Michigaa's final period rally which beat lowa, 33 to 21, and Notre Dame’s 21 to 7 toppling of previously tmdefeated Navy ranked as the top spots today in the midwest weekend football report. High on the list, too, were Michigan State’s 27 to 0 conquest of Wiscotitn and Ohio State’s 49 to 0 rout of Northwestern. Michigan, number one team in the International News Service weekly ratings, aiso ranks as forecost contender for Big Ten championship honors and selection as the conference’s candidate for the annual Rose Bowl game. . The Wolverines have won four Big Ten games and lost none tor a perfect record in their own conference. One of their victims was Michigan State, only team to defeat Notre Dame this year. Michigan plays Illinois next Saturday at Champaign and has an important date Nov. 19 at Ann Arbor with Ohio State, only other eleven which is undefeated in the Big Ten, although twice a loser in non-conference games. Ohio State has a 3-0 Big Ten mark. Th* Buckeyes meet Indiana Saturday at Columbus. Michigan was given a dog-fight last Saturday by lowa before the courageous Hawkeyes succumbed to a three-touchdown surge in the last nine minutes. Quarterback Jim Maddock fired touchdown passes good for 65 and 60 yards to account for two of the scores. Tony Branoff raced 30 yafds for the other. The Wolverines' star ends, Ronnie Kramer and Tom Maentz were On the receiving end of Maddock’s vital tosses. lowa led 14 to 0 at halftime and was on the way to stage the season’s big upset until R ran out of reserve strength. Notre Dame was keyed to its mightiest effort as the Irish sailed into Navy before a record South Bend crowd of 59,475. The game
The Welcome Wagon Hostess Will Knock on Your Door with- Gifts 4 Greeting* from'Friendly Business Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leadera On Me eccwioN *// The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthday* EngagementAnnouncementg Change of residence Arrival* ot Newcomers to City Phone 3-3196 or 3-3479
DAIRYMfN...ask about our BIG-BULKY-LAS SALE'
A spacial price now makos low-cost Bulky-Las PRICK I a top bargain for wintar 84) o / funding plans. \ J / Five big bushels in every 100 lbs. of palatable, body- PV\jL.*. building Bulky-Las make this versatile Chow a | i |^*2' ooLßS -n big dollar’s worth for - dairymen*- • ..■.■■.:■•.-i i *■ Come in and learn the many ways in which BulkyLas can help you make more milk and profit! Stiefel Grain Co. ■.WWAV-W.W.W
was dedicated to the meawry of Knute Rockne, great Notre Dame coach. Paul Hornung, 205-ppund Irish quarterback who has ployed a vital role in ovary gams Inis season, masterminded the torpedoing of the Navy nine-game win streak. Hornung scored one touchdown himself, passed for another and intercepted a pass to set up a, sears. The Notre Dame savage running attack, good for 323 yards, far outshone Navy’s passing barrage as directed by star quarterback George Welsh. Wait Kowalczyk, one of a group of hard-Mtting and fleet-footed Michigan State backs, scored two touchdowns as his team ran over fading Wisconsin. One of Kowalczyk’s runs was ood for 72 yards. Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, Ohio State's stellar halfback, scored two early touchdowns to get his team’s attack functioning against Northwestern. Cassady retired to the bench in the second period for the rest of the game and watched as his teammates handed the Wildcats their sixth straight defeat of the year. West Virginia, unbeaten and untied, romped over Marquette, 39 to 0, with quarterback Freddy Wynant leading the Mountaineers to their sixth straight* win. Dick Borstad slammed for two touchdowns as Minnesota upset Southern California, 25 to 19, in another intersectional game. In other contests, Purdue beat Illinois, 13 to 0, and Indiana defeated Ohio U, 21 to 14. Notre Dame travels to Philadelphia for a game with Penn this Saturday. Other games list Michigan State at Purdue, Minnesota at lowa, and Wisconsin at Northwestern. Pro Football Baltimore 14, Green Bay 10. San Francisco 38, Detroit 21. Chicago Bears 31, Dos Angeles 20. Philadelphia 24, Pittsburgh 0. Cleveland 27, Chicago Cardinals 20. New York 35, Washington 7. BOWLING SCORES a. e. alleys Men’s Factory League W L Flangesls 6 Stators 12 9 Rotors .12 9 Office No. I—— 11 10 Office No. .2 ——2. 8 13 Shafts •00 series: G. Laurtht 669 (213-257-199); P. Briede 606 (192-224-190). 200 scores: J< llark 1 ess 200, M. Hoffman 224. S. Jackson 224, H. King 206. Note: G. league high for the season. G. E. Fraternal • W L Monroeville Lumberl3 8 West End Restaurant ..12 9 K. of C. 12 9 Riverview Gardensll 10 Teeple Truck Lineslo 11 Peterson Elevator —lO 11 Elks.. 9 12 G. E. Club7 14 600 series: Lee Ulman 644 (171-238-235): Ev. Faulkner 619 (267-191-161); Al Buuck 618 (182-190; 246). 200 scores: Baumgartner 200, P. Hoffman 237, L, Hoffman 226, Meyer 212, Gage 201. Laurent 202, G. Schultz 205, Mutschler 215, House 214, Pillars 226, Andrews 215, Appelman 221. G. E. Women’s League W L Office 11 7 Dubs 10 8 Last Frames 9V4 814 Spares .. 614 1114 High scores: Plasterer 183, Briede 175, Engle 170, G. Reynolds 163-175. Schuster 181. Mowery 163.
Detroit Lions Handed Sixth Straight Loss NEW YORK (INS) —About the only ante INlfig la pro football today te Detroit’* ability to toae gamea-aix straight, to be exacL Otherwise every other teem in the National Football Leegve atm is very much in the running for either' the Bostenr CM<er«M« or Western Conference championships. Not that the defending western champions haven't a mathematical chance but it's hard, to imagine them winning six in a row now White, say, Los Angeles and Baltimore win only two of their remaining six. San Francisco used the pitiful Lions as a stopping stone into second place Sunday by cracking the whip. 33 to n, before 47,411 tans in Keaar Stadium. (But the 49’*rz are only sharing the runnerap spot with the Chicago Bears and Green Bay. The Bears forced Los Angeles into a tie for first place with Baltimore by beating the Rams, 31 to 2d, and the Colts got that way by beating Green Bay, 14 to 10, on Saturday night. The Phlladelphfa Eagles helped Cleveland take sole possession of the Eastern Conference lead by knocking Pittsburgh out of a tie, 24 to 9. While the Browns topped the Chicago Cardinals, 26 to 20. The victory pulled the Sagles Into a tie for fourth place with the Cards. Washington remained in show position despite a crushing 35-to-7 defeat at New York. San Francisco fullback Joe Perry, who packed the ball 20 times for 149 yards, scored two of the 49’ers touchdowns but the game-clincher proved to be a 78-yard pass and run play as the half ended. Y. A. Tittle threw a 38-yarder to Carrol Hardy, who outraced three defenders to score. Harten Hill was Mr. Big in the Bears’ win before 69,567 fans at Los Angeles. The elusive Hill was on the receiving end of touchdown passes by George BHanda, Ed Brown and Rick Casares. Browns quarterback Otto Graham was content to stay on the ground while beating the Cards although his four-yard toss to Ray Renfro in the second period proved the winning touchdown. Graham threw only I*2 times, completing just four for 62 yard's" wfi ft fullback Ed Modzelewski ripped off 116 of the Browns’ 197 yards on the ground. Ted Wegert, a 23-year-old rookie with .no eo®egiaUS experience, scored two Jouchdowns and set up the third with a 38-yard run as the Eagles blanked the Steelers before 31,164 partisans iu Philadelphia. Wegert bad been sidelined with a broken foot since the Eagles’ opening win over New York five weeks ago. Jim Patton, another- rookie who never had carried a football professionally until Sunday, sparked the Giants to their lopsided victory over Washington. The former Mississippi star took the opening kickoTf 98 yards for a touchdown and the final punt of the game 69 yards for another score. Alex Webster also scored two TDs for the Giants.
College Football Purdue 13, Illinois 0. Michigan 33, lowa 21. Michigan State 27, Wisconsin 0. Ohio State 49, Northwestern 0. Notre Dame 21. Navy 7. Indiana 21, Ohio U. 14. Minnesota 25. Southern California 19. DePauw 19. Beloit 12. Valparaiso 24, Butler 14. Centre 27, Hanover 13. Franklin 13, Earlham 7. Indiana Central 7. Taylor 6. Wabash 7, Carroll 7 (tie). Bluffton 20, Manchester 7. Chicago Illini 19, Rose Poly fl. Evansville 33, Indiana State 19. St. Joseph’s 28, Ball State 0. West Virginia 39. Marquette 0. Miami (O.) 19, Kent 7. Detroit 0, Cincinnati ff (tie). Xavier (O.) 19, Boston College 12. Oklahoma AAM 14. Tulane 0. Nebraska 19, Kansas 14. Oklahoma 40, Kansas State 7. Missouri 20. Colorado 12. Chattanooga 7, Dayton 7 (lie). Yale 20, Dartmouth 0. Army 27. Colgate 0, Penn State 20, Penn 0. Princeton 14. Brown 7. Syracuse 49, Holy Cross 9. Cornell 34, Columbia 19. Villanova 16, Richmond 14. Miami (Fla.) 21, Pittsburgh 7. MUSW ?7, South Georgia 35, Alabama 14., Tulane 27, Auburn IJ. Georgia Tech 27, Duke 0. Tennessee 45, North Carolina 7. North Carolina State 33, Furman 7. Kentucky 20. like 16. •- • Mississippi 29, Louisiana Stafe 26. Texas A&M 7, Arkansas 7 (tie). Texas 19, Southern Methodist 18. UCLA 47, California 0, Oregon State 13, Washington 7. Stanford 34. San Jose State 18. Oregon. 25. Idaho 0.
TKI DECATUR DAILY DIMOCRAT, DKJATUR, INDIANA
It’s tl)at time again! ■ eOo* The king of sports for most Hoosiers will be underway Ta*sday night as the high school basketball season opens for the long grind winding up next March with the crowning of a state champion. —oOo— Adams county is no exception, as five of the county's nine high schools will engage in three games on opening night tomorrow*. Three others will launch their schedules Friday, white the ninth, the Decatur Yellow Jackets Just out of football, wait until Nov. 15 to start operations. —oOoH— Feature of the opening schedule will be the traditional battle between the Decatur Commodores and the Pleasant Mills Spartans at the Decatur gym. Also on tap Tuesday will be the Jefferson Warriors against the Cardinals at Geneva, while the Monmouth Eagles, sectional and county champions* will travel to Leo. •—oOo— The Adams Central Greyhounds, Berne Bears and Hartford Gorillas will make their first starts Friday. The Greyhounds will tye hosts to Geneva at Adams Central, Hartford will meet the Eagles at Monmouth, and Berne will entertain the Pleasant Mills Spartans. The Limberlost Bell, the county's traveling trophy, will be at stake at Berne, as the Bears retained the trophy from last season. —-oOe - The Berne Bears had the best record, percentage-wise, at the close of last season with 14 Victories and five defeats. The standings of teams at the close of the regular 1954-55 season follows: W L Pct Berne ....1 14 5 .737 Pleasant Mills .. 13 8 .684 Monmouth 14 7 .667 Geneva 13 7 .650 Adams Central .. 12 8 .600 Commodores 11 10, .524 Jefferson 8 11 .421 Yellow Jackets .. 6 14 .300 Hanford 4 15 .211 —oOo — (Results one year ago this week: Pleasant MiHs BVC<9nmodareii <7. Geneva 56. Adams Central 47. Pleasant Mills 5, Berne 4. Monmouth 62, Hartford 39. Detroit—Farmers own about 12 percent of all the passenger automobiles in the U. S. Washington — Greatest immigration year in U. S. history was the year 1907 when a total of 1,285,000 foreign-born arrived to make theic homes here. Washington —- About 71 percent of all U. S. hospital beds are In institutions controlled by the government at federal, state or local levels. Brisbane — Australia has developed a new form of butter corn centrate that does not melt at 100 degrees Fahrenheit and does not deteriorate when it melts at higher temperatures.
CANTON CHINA hong A zS«L MACAU~[ ===== SOUTH CHINA J fOOCHQW<M==x=== | CHINA 1 AMOY Aj |BHxj£l3Ljl - == ~ sfA = RED CHINA now puts forth * claim to Macau (Macao), Portugal* four-century-oM island city colony on the China coast. Micau is the oldest European settlement in China. It includes three islands, 400,000 population (mostly Chinese), and is about SO miles from Britain's Hong Kong. Red China said Portugal’s “continued occupation" ot Chinese coastal territory no longer can be tolerated. ■ T A
Season Is Opened By Lutheran League
Opening games were played at the Monmouth gym this weekend in th* Lutheran grade school basketball league, sponsored by the Lutheran laymen's league of Circuit A. In the opening gamds, Decatur defeated B«thlehem, 34-18; Soest downed Friedheim, 40-29, and Preble edged Binger, 26-20. Decatur FG FT TP D. Caston 0 0 0 Marbach 0 0 0 Ohler 10 2 Busse 0 0 0 Krueckeberg 2 2 8 Ro. Kleinknightlo 2 Ru. Kleinknighto 0 8 C. Caston 0 0 0 Sheets 10 2 Kinerk 5 2 12 Conrad 000 D. Callow 0 0 0 Totals 10 4 24 Bethlehem FG FT TP Fiedler 0 0 0 Stoppenhagen 000 C. Werling 0 0 0 Franke 10 2 L. Graft 3 0 6 E. Werling 0 0 0 D. Nahrwold 0 0 0 L. L. Graft 3 2 8 Roembke 10 2 Totals .... 8 2 18 Soest FG FT TP Behrman ,2 0 4 Reisgies u A 2 0 4 (Rebber 0 0 0 Doctor 10 2 Braun .3 0 6 Werling 0 0 0 Dietrich 6 0 12 R. Saalfrank .. 2 0 4 L. Saalfrank 0 0 0! Linkhart ....,0 0 0 Mueller ... 3 2 8 Sitchler 0 0 0 Totals 19 2 40! Friedheim FG FT TP Schuller 4 0 8 Fuhrman 0 0 0 D. Buuck 0 0 0 Bultemeier 0 0 0 K. Fuhrman 0 0 0 H. Gallmeyerl 0 2 9. Linker .... 0 0 0 D. Gallmeyer 2 0 41 L. Buuck2 2 6 Totals 9 2 20 Preble FG FT TP 0 .g. , g-.l 'St Bulmahn * 6 0 ”12 f L Bieberich ... 4 0 8 D. Bieberich 3 0 6 R. Bieberich 0 0 0 i L. Bulmahn 0 0 0 ■-*— Totals' IS JY Bingen FG FT TP Bradtmueller 113 Schearer 0 0 0 Marhenke 0 0 0 Bulmahn Oil Lepper 4 0 8 Reiter 2 0 4 Scheuman 2 0 4 Zelt .... 0 0 0 Total* 9 2 —20 Adams Central Ticket Sales Are Announced John O. Reed, principal of the Adams Central school, today announced plans for the sale Os season tickets for the Greyhounds' nine home basketball games. Ticket sales to students only will be held at (he school from 9 to 11 a. m. and 1 to 3 p. m. Tuesday, and fdr adults only from 9 to 11 a. m„ and 1 to 3 p. m. Wednesday, Tickets are priced at 82 for students and 34 for adults. The Greyhounds open their season Friday night, playing .Geneva at Adams Central. Albany — New York state ranks first in the production of talc and gypsum. HilimihlllM • WANT ADS Use The Daily Democrat Want Ads
OIARK IKI JN Hv ND STOOPS » HAO SHAO “M 010 YOU HEAR ME,ELMER/ V YEAH, \ A R E V ERSE WITH ’ -TM’ ONLY THING ' WKfllfi fl THAT GLORY- J ll 1 \\ s'—J' B orabbin’ r) - z ') . \\ .. .Jl&y.jHMk 4?) luf Sb OZARK fa fiA iv/tocAry METT xßaßiJv* ks&m ti /s, DtelaoWtl’®/nthp WaaoMa | ’,.- \ e-Aj/ W *.» IVJ T fa ■' — ■- * , ■ . . ■ ■ - ... : . ■ - --W—ww-mj - • - '■ ■ •
Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Tuesday PleaMnt Mills at Commodores. Jefferson at Geneva. Monmouth at Leo. Friday Geneva at Adams Central. Hartford at Monmouth. Pleasant Mills at Berne. Jefferson vs Madison at Geneva. Petition Ouster Os Missouri Grid Coach ST. LOUIS (INS) —Petitions seeking the ouster of Missouri head football coach Don Faurot reportedly are being circulated in the state. The petitions are said to have originated with alumni of the school in Kansas City and St. Joseph and have reached St. Louis. Missouri defeated Colorado, 20 to 12, Saturday for its first victory in seven games this year. College Big Ten NEW YORK (INS) — Here are the country's top ten college football teams, with won-lost records in parenthesis, as voted this week by International News Service's panel of experts: 1. Michigan (6-0). 2. Maryland (7-0). 3. Oklahoma (6-0). 4. UCLA (6-1). 5. Michigan State (5-1). 6. Notre Dame (5-1). 7. West Virginia (6-0). 8. Georgia Tech (6-1). ». Navy (5-1). 10. Texas Christian (6-1) and Texas AAM (5-1-1). The panel is composed of EastWest Shrine game scouts Bernie Bierman, Andy Kerr and Francis J. Powers; sportscaster Harry Wismer, INS columnist Bob Considine and INS sports editor John Barrington.
MYERS invites you to come in and see the BIG CHANGE in television e O Victor LOWEST PRICE EVER •.. OVERSIZE jpggSSSgSM 21 inch IB RCA VICTOR trd- ’ts television I \lk i II EgWEMW.. I II ' X. ® 111 )V . ~ ■ - J the TOWNE 95 COMPLETE WITH ALL CHANNEL UHF-VHF TUNER AM See the new RCA VICTOR ... with all the new BIG CHANGE features ... and you will see why year after year since 1946 ... more people buy RCA VICTOR than any other television ! MYERS HOME & iTO SUPPLY ACROSS THE STREET — EAST OF THE COURT HOUSE
Ohio State Facing Full-Scale Probe COLUMBUS, 0. (INS)—‘'Gifts” made to players may touch off a full-scale investigation of Ohio State's athletic program. A published report said today that the principal target will be the practice by Woody Hayes, head football mentor at the Buckeye encampment, of advancing hie players small personal loans or gifts. Hayes never has tried to keep such gifts a secret and, reportedly, has made advances totaling near 13,500 since he took over the Ohio State helm. Attention was focused on the gifts in a recent article on Ohio State in a weekly sports magazine. A Cleveland newspaper reported Sunday that the Ohio State faculty council will elect a sevenman committee to study the situation. Few persons realized that Hayes' '‘helping hand” action may be in direct violation of Western Conference regulations. Buch rules state that all help for athletes must come through regular university sources. Recently, St. Louis university was placed on one year’s probation by the NCAA because an alumnus purchased a shirt, tie, coat and topcoat for a player who now is no longer In
NOTICE MOVING TO NEW LOCATION 135 S. Ist Street—Across from Butler Garage WE WILL BE CLOSED FROM November 3 to November 7 DECATUR AUTO SUPPLY
PAGE SEVEN
school. Dick UfklM, athlete director at Ohio State, refused to comment on the matter Sunday, as did Hayes. But another university official said; “It looks as though wo might be in real trouble about this.** The published report Mid that the faculty council had planned "a study of the Buckeye athletic program as long ago as last spring. But this was considered as nothing more than routine. * High School Football Foft Wayne Concordia 32, Cleveland Lutheran 0. Fort Wayne Central Catholic S 3, Fort Wayne South 7. Boonville 14, Evansville Memorial 13. South Bend Central 14, Goshen 0. New Albany 13, Louisville Shawnee 13 (tie). - ~ Winter Term will begin December S Degree Ceereee In Bmslwdss A4nWsilsSvv4lw6o Ix.cvtlve S.<v.ferlel ! Approved for Veteran Trelnlag frtvlew Infneu Training NOT roeolrod International Collogo Fort Wayne 2, Indiana
